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em RHA SA IN ROMS RPE NS Re th ee em AES NE EES RAM Page Six i THE DAILY WORKER THE DA Ly WORKER. giving even the slightest concessions to the work- aa ey Py 3 al lh a lle ected A , aii to f. . « Wiarine workers Published by the DAILY WORKER PUBLISHING CO. Second, that the program of trust busting and the , ee 1118 W. Washington Blvd., Chicago, DL middle-class reform in which LaFollette has been For Fair Dealing. Sale (Phone: Monroe 4712) engaged all his life, has left the most powerful members of the Marine Trans- : peel antrs o - ic x ie we eee Fig iiiienis yltees ed tbe et your organization in the fall ‘ itali i i n- port Workers’,Industrial Union, | lerstand this, should make pointer Oo be called by joint agreement wi of 1 n ea we ype hs waline can No. 510, Induatetaee Workers of the | protests to their officials that such ac-| tlié Red Transport Workers section “The result of our last communica- weak > 1 By malt: World: tion will appear to Latin American | of the Red International of Labor Un-| tion, as well as all the previons:ones, $6.00 per year $3.50....6 months $2.00...8 months | of the most feeble weapons of defense. Fellow Workers:, Over the signa-| workers as a trick to call a confer-| fons. | was only a sharp rebuff, the further By mail (in Chicago only): i Wisconsin is to the C. P. P. A.-ites what para-| tures of Fellow Wérkers T. P. Sulli-| ence which will be incomplete in rep-] Only upon a policy which coincides | intensification of the mutual polemic, 68.00’ per year Lpuliontehi sets Eh .A eee dise is to the Mohammedans, but three decades of| van and Ed Jeppson, secretary-treas- | resentation, yet, under cover of being | with the program of the Red Interna-| leaving the question of the interna Min iatniamaltans. oC.” ete i hi ried ble to force an| Ure", pro tem, and acting chairman, | international, actually separate some| tional of Labor Unions can a revolu-| tional unity of the revolutionary’ sea- rerene et mat ane aes ee LaFolletteism find the workers unable to fore respectively, the M. T. W. has issued | marine workers of Latin America| tionary struggle of the’ world’s marine | men unsolved. We do not want to re. THE DAILY WORKER employer to tell prospective slaves that they are tendance at a world conference of rev-] was directed to the general conven- SUBSCRIPTION RATES Chicago, Ilinels a call to the marine workers of the | from the others which*have not been| workers be successfully waged. One| turn to the past and reopen the pole- beh dh aM aia doa onli expected to scab. Western Hemisphere inviting unions | given time enough to respond. These| serious criticism which should be.| mic. We do ‘ae Leche hoe raise a ’ 1165p Gaboat o volutionary progress” | of marine workers to send an official | unions will naturally feel insulted by | made against the M. T..W. officials is| before you in its ful ; Rey Tait NUNN rover DAItORS ETRY, for Be — y prog representative to an international con- | being confronted with a fait accompli | that they have not only ignored the| vital issue of the international sea- MORITZ J, LOEB.....nnemnome Business Manager ala “B. and O. Bi ko eas ference at New Orleans, La., March | in the shape of an “international” ac-| invitation to participate in the world | men’s movement, the question of in- 5.8L AAT YRC RTT LA, AOC LMU NREL 75 O08 1, 1926, so cord from which they are excluded | conference called by the International | ternational unity. Entered as second-class mail Sept. 21, 1928, at the Post- Ch eens The purpose of the conference is | without they come to terms with its| Propaganda Committee of the Red “The last few years have tot ‘wit- Office at Chicago, Ill, under the act of March 8 1879. M ortictans, Doctors, Lawy ers: given ae he ated ion of relations | dominant group—the M. T. W. Transport Workers at Berlin on Feb.| nessed any victorious action a the ” The M. T. W. officials, by such un-|.25, but’ they have consciously set the | part of the seamen, who were eaten <P 290 Advertising rates on application and Lafargue and plans for co-operation and unity a of action of marin !workers of the | called for haste, lay themselves open| date of the New Orleans Conference and routed in every one of ‘their éf- : in| Western Hemispheéte!! to accusation by Latin American un-| to conflict with the Berlin Conference, | forts.’ The fundamental cause of this °. li Di hi im S h ' Lafargue hes denit at length a ~ ass ts Hail End of¢fsolation! ions as’ having, by a ruse, robbed} clearly aiming at a rival and not a|is the lack of unity in the inter Capita ist Dictators Ip M OCHOOLS | which all sections of the exploiting class adjus' Fellow Workersj: the revolutionary | them of their right to consultation be- | friendly conferenc: tional movement of the seamen. © i i isti de of ethics to a robber system, and ill ice |fore action involving them is taken, We have heard a lot of yapping about. the ter-|its christian code of rth , workers of all the world will rejoice n rible dictatorship of the Boriet ppt of | the continual conflict between morality in private | to know that the Me'R. W. of the I. W.| and to the charge of really splitting workers: and peasants, which excludes from the||life and in the world of industry and business. W. is resolutely pu aside the mis- | and not uniting the marine workers of 5 ys ; is| taken policy of i jon which has} this hemisphere. A sincere desire for ' overcrowded schools and colleges the sons and| It is in the lower strata of the bourgeois that this aay balbed tis shipowners and seri-|international accord demands that| setting up of barriers between work-|f #ll countties. To this task must daughters of the “nepman” and the profit grabbing }conflict is most apparent and it shows itself as | ....1 injured the seamen, particularly | this conference but prepare the way ers deserves the severest condemna-| @ Subordinated all other issués, bé- speculator until after the children of the workers | constant struggle on the part of the petty parasites} those in the M. T. W, Every revolu-|for a later and more completely rep-} tion of the M. T. W. membership, who| f0Te this task all the secondary alf- ternational solidification of the forded of the seamen in their struggle against capital is today the most serious, most pressing task facing the seamen Working Class Needs First! In view of the life and death si gle for existence of the world’s. sea- men and their organizations, such s q i i i i ‘hi ference. ferences must disappear. re se .}to justify their existence and the’ leech-like role| tionary worker wil] hail the decision | resentative con must let their officials understand, | *¢" and farmers are given as much and as good an edu ker beat relationto the working class. of the M. T. W, to courageously set Voice and Vote for Latin American | once for all, that the vital needs of the ‘This is the question’ we raise be- cation, both cultural and vocational, as they can by play foot upon the path of ever-closer fra- Unions. fore you. If it is difficult and ‘practic: membership are not forever to be made the plaything of a few fellow workers whose sectarian fanaticism is prejudicing the interests of the work- ing class. In order that the members of the Marine Transport Workers may s¢ge clearly just what the M. T. W. officers have done to continue the disunity of the world’s marine workers, the R. I. A. C, publishes below the following letter, which was sent by the Interna- tional Propaganda, Committee of the Red Transport Workers to the M. T. W. headquarters; but which has never been published by the M. T. W. of- ficers or answered by them, but which certainly was received by them as may be proven by the fact that they lifted the very phraseology of its absorb. The strenuous efforts necessary for rationaliza-| oonity with the international labor.| The R. 1 A. C. hopes that every We have failed to hear any protests from these| tion force the cockroach eapitalists and their more} in the emancipation of the world’s | branch of the M. T. W. will be repre- gentlemen who “oppose all dictatorships” against/articulate professional associates to perform| workers the transport workers may | sented at New Orleans, and that M. be i i i many strange antics and utter many grotesque] Play a noble part, and a recognition of | T. W. delegates will uphold the right the caste system practiced in the public schools this demands that there be no turning | of every Latin American delegate to of this country, where every sort of affront, dis- statements. \ 1 back for those workers who are con-| full voice and vote. There must be couragement and difficulty is encountered by the| It is too bad, therefore, that Paul Lafargue could| scious of their class and true to its} no tricky hedging, such as making the boy or girl of the working class who dares to thirst | not have lived to attend the banquet of 500 under- Beton sale. bok na cosierenen an I. W. W. meeting with ton more knowledge and culture than the capitalist takers held yesterday in Chicago and have wit- ‘or this reason the Red Interna-| visiting delegates merely invited to a js tional Affiliation Committee (R. I. A.|make approving speeches. There class, in its infinite wisdom, ordains as necessary nessed what was perhaps the finest living example C.) expresses its deep gratification | must be a real threshing out of policy for a wage slave in office or shop. Yet, if this is|,of the correctness of his analysis of petty bourgeois] that the M. T. W. of the I. W. W. has|and the foundation laid for organiza- a not a genuine dictatorship of the capitalists against|Smugness and the manner in which their ethical] made this decision which will} if fol-| tion of a Pan-American confederation the workers’ children, we don’t know dictatorships code is formulated. lowed by sincere effort to attain|of all marine workers. No exclusion a wt < A world unity of all seamen, place the|of opinions or votes of representa- when we see them. We are indebted Ly the Chicago ‘Tribune for the M. T. W. into the foreground of rev- | tive delgations must be permitted, and A case in point is the caste system prevailing in| Story of the proceedings and we are quite certain) oitionary unionism internationally | leading in the policies must be the . is { italism in all its} and add to the proud traditions of the | fight against the o pression of Latin the New York \schools, where a viciously schemed|that this staunch defender of capita! D ight ag D resale snag VS al 4 i i i fighting I. W. W. Ameri les by United S out “intelligence test” discriminates against work- re panonery gave the assembled babbitry none} fighting ik dae eacaas Ghee ee ing class children in such a way as to prevent them|the worst of it. ally impossible to come to an under- standing with the seamen’s organtza- tions that have completely or partial- ly gone over to the side of capital (Fargette, Havelock Wilson, Juliettt), it is certainly possible and extremely necessary to establish some sort of unity and agreement among the rev- olutionary seamen. It is primarily a question of the establishment of an agreement between the revolutionary seamens organization grouped around the I. P. C. and the revolutionary sea- men organized in the I. W. W. “The main difficulties which have stood hitherto in the way of such an agreement consisted of the fact that in the center of all negotiations stood the question of the affiliation of the opening paragraphs and used it in I. W. W. to the Red International of . s The New Orleans Conference has} Upon the subject of policy, complete | their call for the New Orleans Conter- | L*bor Unions, which the I. W. W. has from following any cultural advance and, instead,| The heights of unconscious humor reached at great possibilitiesyi'It may do much | international unity must tebe nk rigdh= Shia Tattat Sa tia wa: refused to do. However, the above i i i i i those} to unify the marine workers. There | place. Altho the last M. T. W. - mentioned situation urgently dictates shunts them off into “vocational” courses, where| this gathering, the close connection between thos y a 4 place. 0 the last M. T. W. con-| “Moscow, October 29, 1924. rat are trained to be the hewers of wood and the| Who prey on the workers in sickness, legal dif-| is also the possibjlitysthat it may fail vention went on record for a world| “General Secretary, Marine ‘Trans-| te Stn ak s ein oe af an detieete of Geniie fur tbh “hector claasen’ all the] ficulty and death and the divided allegiance of pub-|‘® ™easure up to..this anticipation, | conference, and altho the call for the | port Workers Industrial Union. agreement... That is why the E F.C. : A ‘a 3 :. that it may end witl} empty speeches, | New Orleans meetings recites in de- “fellow Workers :*)\The Internation-|°£ Transport Workers considers it rest of their lives. lie officials was there disclosed sardine devastating 4! or good but ineffeftive resolutions. ; tail the need for unity between the M. al Propaganda Committee of Revolu-| "&essary to urge you to take up the This damnable conspiracy against working class|manner that we feel justified in lightening up our) tvery member of tif M. T. W. must |T. W. and European seamen, and even | tionary Transport Workers sends fra-| 1vestion of contact and co-operation : ‘ 940 e A * ; af tee ; between the I. P. C. and your organ- i i iti f every | editorial page with a verbatim re-print of the most} interest himself in Making the con-| despite the fact that the M. T. W. of-| ternal greetings to the revolutionary oe so on ae ia es see important. parts of a’ news story that requires but| ference @ success aif a beginning of | ficials have received an invitation to} seamen affiliated with Your organiza- a A cont: tion and ‘WOPker “and working) class organization. roi more and greater su such a conference (which they have | tion and: expresses its, admiration of ~fah snatvespvpesandlen Geib tate: liberals who fret themselves to death about the}a few additional words. : concealed from the M. T. W. mem-|the heroic le waged by your friendly connections are absolutely in- methods of social change really cared anything) We begin with the speech of the Chicago health | i i bers and not replied to), the action | organization t dapitalist slavery seclgy eng noe fener about cultural advance of the masses, they would|commissioner, as reported by The Tribune under of the M. T. W. officials indicates an | and for the e! me ek.” Lately, Une renee ote ipation of the toil- ; = pean shippi i been get their counter-revolutionary blinders off long|the head: “Bundesen Lauds Undertakers As Noble ris Saheglde penacatha od gegen cownte Hees | hn Intermutronat~ Pro a condaotive \ picanies pobsite on enough to see the essential dictatorship of the cap-|Artisians—Calls ‘Them Loyal Workers at Annyal| ."to other orzani treme necessity for unity of marine | Committer hal Hepedtdaly ‘ceetier to| the question of the so-called “deser- italist class in this class discrimination and do a| Bail”: officers of the M. T. workers not only of this hemisphere | you with propos#ls Belting on the re-| !0"” of the Huropean seamen and on i j ie di i «|. ex ‘ dated January 15, f but of Hurope and Asia as well. é the work of the I. W. W. Thé: quit little fretting about this dictatorship. ‘%t-was Dr. Herman N, Bundesen, commis- lations between Pi vats ine sd ; ‘aa ae Pa 4 x New Orleans New Orleans Must Be First Step. | the revolutio ting of the European vessels at’ Am: But they won’t, and it remains for a labor or-| sioner of health, a. speaker and guest, who it to receive san The New Orleans Conference must | the world hd ich! erican seaports by the seamen, which | ganization, the New York Teachers’ Union, to voige| »astruck the major chord of the ‘festivities. marine workers’ crganizations in Ar-| go on record for complete internation- is due to bad conditions and low. pay, the protest—for the Communist press to give pub-| 7.:7+°"Instead of knocking or joking about gentina, Chile and Peru, is ridiculous. | al unity with a resolution favoring at- is explained by the I. W. W. agitation, licit d explain th thod whereby workers’ | :; dertak: hould be constant- A according to the capitalist press, ee eee ee ee p> othe uni ae “hid we iets “ " é ‘ie “And we are now facing the prepar- children are robbed of culture and forced to stay | vicrly boosting him,” he declared. “What Injunction to Help ation of a erusade against the Europ. in’ the ranks of manual laborers. The Teachers’ is more beautiful, what more kindly, Scab G t Fi ean seamen on the one hand, and | Union deserves every aid organized labor can give than to step into a home where there a arment Firm against the I. W. W. on the other, «= | in this protest has been death, where there are tears 6 A VE C LIDGE Made It Bankrupt the part of the Buropean shipping im a4 - see RR . 8. Slaves’ er bite’ abane and gs Bi ort?” y Injunctions failed to produce pro- (Continuad Hane » effect that this question ts being ie Idaho Improvements Assistant State’s Attorney John Sbarboro, FORM AL ROTEST fits for the Daniel Boone Woolen ra . painted wor F8 potas Met keenest es ee Those naive and cheerful souls who believe that} who is also in the undertaking business with Mills, Inc., the open shop clothing pe aida tales: all: of ‘which put! after the presidential elections in Am- the criminal syndicalism laws were simply the|~ his partner, Attorney John Brisallero, acted as WASHINGTON, Fb. 11.—President | ™#kers of Rock Island and elsewhere, | together indicates:that last war may | erica. In this letter the unification of product of “war hysteria” and with comparisons| toastmaster. He introduced Dr. Bundesen as | Coolidge personally drawn from christian theology told the workers| the man who had made the undertaker depend | ands of Santiago $igiesias, of the | Joseph Byfield, new president of the r . r stent? Porto Rican legisi@tare, about the that “this too will pass away,” should study the| on old age instead of sickness for his liveli- middle of January, altérmal statement, concern. He has a woeful picture to ived from the|it would appear from the report of our forces, co-ordination of the actiy- ities of our two organizations is a most practical issue, the solutionof which may_be of vital effect in the very likely have: a successor. Cie es F an incomplete’ pun may be par- , it : hat Abdel- : recent action of the Idaho state legislature. ‘ hood. i typewritten and accompanied by a STORE da ieee peoiraiy eat ph aur Tee ae ee ported of the seamen of all coun- | This collection of Mormon church satellites;| “Yours is a noble profession,” de- large number of affiflavits. describing | hints at amazing dishonesty in man- | Like wise politicians the Riffians have pa in 62 the ta’ Oat at al | water power company tools, mining corporation clared the health commissioner. “I . ia wholesale frauds practiced by the | semen, called on God to assist them in freeing| ,,/"9,"iem Of the fact that on : ree | stoolpigeons, lumber company lackeys and shyster would like to see you call yourselves = SS tant te ae oe working | Attempts to unionize the Daniel | their country of the invader and like Satlonal Propaganda Cominitas ee ! lawyers willing to peddle their services to anyone morticians instead of undertakers.” nu ‘This statement aehed tho Now, | Boone plant in Rock Island last year |a good patriotic Rittian, he answered hold a conference in Berlin, Germany Scat & rs y Thomas J. Dunlap, “the singing mortician,” ember. This statement asked the pres- produced a shower of injunctions that | the prayer tho it is questionable if he| at which ‘will ‘be discussed the wae } who will pay them real money, has re-vamped the'| " as J. P, * 8 ? ident to investigate’ the theft of the | rorpade picketing, peaceful discussion | would have done so had the enemy | o¢ our marine section, we invite you to | state criminal syndicalism law and worded it to} sang “Red Hot Mamma,” then former Judge government of Porto Rico, in this|and almost all other activity on the | been France instead of Spain. God has ciel an otal tepcesentauive: aie prohibit all strikes. The law now has this provi-| John F. O’Connell took up the theme. eyeineal ‘ ee part of organizers and pro-union|a wholesome fear of artillery, effic- full powers to our conference, for. the sion—one that war time lawmakers did not dare “There is no reason a lawyer should House spokesman” snwounced’ thar | eer, Citi workers. were roughly {tency and military genius, all of which | purpose of discussing our relations. to include because of the need for placating the not appear before you,” he declared. Presi treated by company agents and po-|the Spaniards do not possess. The| We believe that with an unprejudiced inclu: cau Pp ig 7 J resident Coolidge had never heard of | }ice, The mills tried to keep on pro-| jatest report from Tangier, indicates ~ PES You have recognized the close affil are : and unbiased approach to this matter, labor unions: selivahi- Shee 5 ‘arges of election frauds in Porto|ducing. Meanwhile the company as-| that Spain has barely a toehold on| jt would be possible to agree on “Any acts or efforts wilfully or maliciously to pet ogee sh on nd EB i There Rico. ‘ sets were shrinking portentously. Riffian territory, Abdel-Krim, intends| fundamental questions of our hinder, or to destroy property or slow up work” and the unde! ig pr m The visit of Iglesias and former} ‘The company balance sheet at the | to chop off the toe as soon as gets! each side retaining the necessary free- » : is no doubt that a pleasant feeling of Speaker Coll-Cuchi'of the lower | end of 1923 showed a surplus of $467,- thru celebrating the marriage of his| dom of action . are defined as sabotage and come “within the mean- companionship exists between the house of the Porto Rican legislature | 605. In one year this had rotted into " son with the daughter of Raisuili, his former, enemy but now ‘his ally—be- cause Raisuili is almost dead. “We shall be extremely pleased to welcome at our conference an at itative representative of the to the White House 6n Feb. 6 was de-|a ‘deficit of $2,678,496. ‘The woolen Py an voted to a discussion with Mr. Cool-|and worsted plants will probably be Mr. O'Connell urged an interest in civic | jage of the economié misery in the is-|sold and the business confined to the ing of the act,” to use the legal phraseology. three professions.’ The local A. F. of L. officialdom which saw no danger to the unions when the original law was Pst. Transport Workers’ Industrial Union affairs. land, because both Ricans as-|making of clothing in the Moline, that d owe passed, and who complacently watched the perseeu- “The personality that dissipates sor- sumed that the petit handed to the | Rock Island, and Davenport factories. pig eager pr ame ater Big vighin setetbnc rate re tion of members of the I. W. W. which followed, bl f chief executive thi weeks earlier | Stockholders will have to put up $500,- “ ; cut : ‘ row and cheers where the blow o' Primo de Rivera is the chief. This} “Please apply on all questions con- fought the amended bill. Their belated efforts made death has Struck,” he said, “will find had been read, ie. 000 to keep the concern going. Spanish Mussolini undertook to defeat! nected with this proposal to our rej little impression on the capitalist politicians and 4 ‘ j ving the. civic problem,” the. Moroccans when he seized office, | resentative in the United States, ny ares e e executed a few of his opponents and | rade Otto Wangerin, Como Bou! We have emphasized some of the more tasty ex- exiled the most dangerous of the rest. | St. Paul, Minn., who is to deliver HOW THEY MAKE THE WORKERS PAY tracts that our readers might not inadverently But Primo was out of luck. Most: f| this letter. Fraternally, overlook these gems of bourgeois thought. . “In one week; the first week of January, the capitalist class struck its | the money he sent to Morocco to bribe| “Shachnovsky, Please not that the assistant state’s attorney and first three blows at ithe working class. the native chieftains is now in the| “Secretary of the his partner are also in. the undertaking business. “In the first week of January the textile barons, the National Associa-| hands of Abdel-Krim who seems to| Prop Committee of R Pp . th t tion of Textile Mariufacturers, whose president, Morgan Butler, is the son|be making. good use the dough. The |’ psc ie a — Tae er ke xt pbonicteay of Coolidge's campaign manager, slashed the wages of 1,021,864 workers 10| idea of marrying his son to Raiguili’s| Members of the M. TOW. retaine sue for the deceased the mining, lumber, water power and railroad in- terests of Idaho will proceed now to tighten the shackles of their slaves—shackles that are already heavy enough in all conscience. A revolutionist could probably get a hearing be- fore some of the unions in Idaho now—pefore he was arrested under the improved: crimitial syn- dicalism law. - etic dayton 4 per cent! s Aenehier, grand soniiieg ™ Fic om) ne ones you a chance to bury him at a fat figure. “In the first week of January, by the direct order of Coolidge, the Pesetas lega wry, paneer 4 . ” The close affinity between the commissioner of} strike-breaker president, the United States senate voted down the wage be eres: of eearoes eitel van kee aa te Evolutionary P. rogress health and the undertaking fraternity, it seems] demands of 300,000 underpaid postal workers- n ange Workers may strike until they starve, but if the| to us, should be a source of worry to the Chicago ; In er be Leap lage and on the last day of that week. on . at dj anuar: ’ e cal bosses can secure enough scabs to make a showing} populace in view of his recent exploit of O. K.ing ne disiiiend (Comme rty, by imprisoning under a ten-year sentence | song xo bandit coverntocnt ota face | fclally’ represent the M.T. W. aa te. th re is no strike in progress, according to the de-| typhoid-bearing oysters. Charles E. Ruthenberg, utive secretary of the Workers (Communist) | behead him for his financial dealings | Wested, in plans for co-ordination of cision of the Wisconsin supreme court handed! “The pleasant feeling of companionship between Party, in the Michigan atate penitentiary at Jackson, Michigan, and an- r the struggle against capitalism and down a few days ago. ; the medical, the legal and the undertaking” guilds,| ,o4nced that Robert Minor will be brought to trial in February. William 2. without reference to the matter of Labor unions succeeded in having a law passed| noted by the ex-judge who spoke, has an ominous] Foster is to be tried for the second time, in the hope of finally locking him one poster companies alae of any or all of the I. W a number of years ago compelling employers to|signicance for those outside the circle of leeches.| up to prevent him from serving the workers. William F. Dunne, and a score enaged in outdoor advertising Hee het ae Pa w. state that a strike was on when they advertised) Their “joy in solving elvic problems” is explained| more | of the Workers (Communist) Party, are scheduled to follow a uabdee Raa Fp pan eat niust urge that this be don aid must for workers to replace their striking employes.|/by the composition of ‘the groups—one of which | son after, on ch prorely et jembling’ in a meeting to discuss the Me repoeee. to nese "590,000,006 insist that the New Orleans ‘ The decision of the Wisconsin court wipes out this| worries the workers si¢k, another of which brings| !nterests of the working class! i ence open the door to solfdi worth of business this year, The sign |)” of att Ws The above fri leaflet, “STRIKE AGAINST THE WAGE CUTS," pub- revolutionary marine workers Of law in that state and sets a precedent that other|them to the brink’ of ‘the grave while the last one iia by the natal i eof the party and sold to the membership for post capitalists believe in amalgai , a i side. The acquisition would be per-| from the New York headquarters to stabbed at the heart of the working class, fectly in accord with capitalist ethics | ttend the Berlin Conference and of- her mind and put him on the losing | for action, still time for a delegate { state courts will be quick to follow. All the bosses| throws them in—all in the name of faith, hope and! ¢5 59 . thousand or $1.80 for 600. It’s up. to you 40 procure a eupply for - It 9 gpa! rhea was Uany ana’Reveluster: shee ‘ have to do now is to show that-their plant is run-| charity. free distribution. The workers must be informed of the national scdpe of jy. labor takers fighting amal RED INTERNA’ ap, ti ning in some fashion or other, . / Lafargue is dead, and it perhaps is just as well.| the capitalist drive on thelr glass. Has your branch or city central committee Mecaten they feat! ide vArPiuiaT ON i The decision shows two things clearly: He would have ‘latighed Himself to death anyway | ordered any? If not,,why not? Forward your order to Workers Party of Jobs and they also fear any West Madison Street, } First, that capitalist agencies abrogate lawsafter witnessing‘these prize asses in action. America, National:@affice, 1118 Washington Bivd., Chicago, Ill, °° ‘of progressive change.